Slide 1
... differences exist • Comorbidity within and across diagnoses addressed • Criteria sets parallel the ICD 11 (proposed) ...
... differences exist • Comorbidity within and across diagnoses addressed • Criteria sets parallel the ICD 11 (proposed) ...
Obsessive Compulsive Disorder
... • It is equally common in males and females. • In the UK, OCD is the fourth most common psychological disorder. • It has a typical onset from late adolescence to early adulthood. • Many people who have this disorder do not seek help and in fact learn to hide their condition • For many sufferers, how ...
... • It is equally common in males and females. • In the UK, OCD is the fourth most common psychological disorder. • It has a typical onset from late adolescence to early adulthood. • Many people who have this disorder do not seek help and in fact learn to hide their condition • For many sufferers, how ...
Basic Statistics for the Behavioral Sciences
... Occurs less often in prepubertal children Rapid rise in adolescence Adults over 65 have about 50% less than adults Three-month-olds can show depression Children below nine do not show classic mania or bipolar symptoms • Mood disorders are often misdiagnosed as ADHD • Children are being diagnosed wit ...
... Occurs less often in prepubertal children Rapid rise in adolescence Adults over 65 have about 50% less than adults Three-month-olds can show depression Children below nine do not show classic mania or bipolar symptoms • Mood disorders are often misdiagnosed as ADHD • Children are being diagnosed wit ...
Myers3-Ch 13
... Depress the activity of the central nervous system, reducing anxiety but impairing memory and judgment Can impair memory and judgment; potentially lethal when combined with alcohol Nembutal, Seconal, and Amytal ...
... Depress the activity of the central nervous system, reducing anxiety but impairing memory and judgment Can impair memory and judgment; potentially lethal when combined with alcohol Nembutal, Seconal, and Amytal ...
Chapter 6 – Mood Disorders and Suicide
... – Hallmark of most mood disorders – Relation between depression and sleep Mood Disorders: Psychological Dimensions • Stressful Life Events – Stress is strongly related to mood disorders – Poorer response to treatment, longer time before remission – Link with the diathesis-stress and reciprocal-gene ...
... – Hallmark of most mood disorders – Relation between depression and sleep Mood Disorders: Psychological Dimensions • Stressful Life Events – Stress is strongly related to mood disorders – Poorer response to treatment, longer time before remission – Link with the diathesis-stress and reciprocal-gene ...
Mood disorders: pearls of wisdom from a lifetime of observation
... for responders; unbiased metaanalyses were negative.’ Similarly, Professor Angst contended that, contrary to the general view, correct statistical analysis of trial data shows that antidepressants start to induce change within the first 12 days of their administration and do not take a number of wee ...
... for responders; unbiased metaanalyses were negative.’ Similarly, Professor Angst contended that, contrary to the general view, correct statistical analysis of trial data shows that antidepressants start to induce change within the first 12 days of their administration and do not take a number of wee ...
Mood Disorders - People Server at UNCW
... Family Studies Rate is high in relatives of probands Relatives of bipolar probands – Risk for unipolar depression Adoption Studies Data are mixed Twin Studies Concordance rates are high in identical twins Severe cases have a stronger genetic contribution Heritability rates are high ...
... Family Studies Rate is high in relatives of probands Relatives of bipolar probands – Risk for unipolar depression Adoption Studies Data are mixed Twin Studies Concordance rates are high in identical twins Severe cases have a stronger genetic contribution Heritability rates are high ...
DSM-5 - Wiley
... distress and mood changes. For children and adolescents, mood may be reported as irritable. Presentation may differ from what is seen in an adult. May be confused with DMDD where the mood is consistently agitated for at least a year and does not take on a cyclic pattern in which the individual seems ...
... distress and mood changes. For children and adolescents, mood may be reported as irritable. Presentation may differ from what is seen in an adult. May be confused with DMDD where the mood is consistently agitated for at least a year and does not take on a cyclic pattern in which the individual seems ...
Assessment and Diagnosis of DSM-5 Substance
... Chair, Substance-Related Disorders Work Group 1. “diagnosed with a clinical interview” 2. “abuse not milder than dependence” 3. “dependence does not = addiction as long as follow doctor’s ...
... Chair, Substance-Related Disorders Work Group 1. “diagnosed with a clinical interview” 2. “abuse not milder than dependence” 3. “dependence does not = addiction as long as follow doctor’s ...
Day 1 PPT
... People are fascinated by the exceptional, the unusual, the abnormal. This fascination can be due to two reasons: 1.During various moments we feel, think and act like an abnormal individual. 1.Psychological disorders may bring unexplained physical symptoms, irrational fears, and suicidal thoughts to ...
... People are fascinated by the exceptional, the unusual, the abnormal. This fascination can be due to two reasons: 1.During various moments we feel, think and act like an abnormal individual. 1.Psychological disorders may bring unexplained physical symptoms, irrational fears, and suicidal thoughts to ...
Anxiety_Disorders
... Anxiety disorders are often comorbid with one another mood disorders substance-use disorders eating disorders personality disorders Why are anxiety disorders so often comorbid with other disorders? ...
... Anxiety disorders are often comorbid with one another mood disorders substance-use disorders eating disorders personality disorders Why are anxiety disorders so often comorbid with other disorders? ...
DSM-5 Overview
... • Why is there a revised edition? • Periodically the APA updates the information in the DSM based on feedback from working people within mental health treatment, and following extensive working committee discussions with specialists who diagnose/treat the various disorders. • The latest edition of t ...
... • Why is there a revised edition? • Periodically the APA updates the information in the DSM based on feedback from working people within mental health treatment, and following extensive working committee discussions with specialists who diagnose/treat the various disorders. • The latest edition of t ...
OCD introduction
... “right” way. Often, they must organize things in an exact, particular, or “perfect” way before beginning daily tasks. They become extremely distressed if their things are moved, touched, or rearranged. ...
... “right” way. Often, they must organize things in an exact, particular, or “perfect” way before beginning daily tasks. They become extremely distressed if their things are moved, touched, or rearranged. ...
Chapter 16
... Fear & Anxiety in Children Children develop different fears for the first time at different ages; the onset may be sudden and may have no apparent environmental cause. Some fears are both common and relatively stable across different ages. Other fears become less frequent as children grow old ...
... Fear & Anxiety in Children Children develop different fears for the first time at different ages; the onset may be sudden and may have no apparent environmental cause. Some fears are both common and relatively stable across different ages. Other fears become less frequent as children grow old ...
Presentation - Virginia Summer Institute for Addiction Studies
... Internet Gaming Disorder and Co-Morbidity • 30% of problem internet users meet criteria for a cooccurring mental health disorder, such as mood disorders, Bipolar 1, and depression (Ashley & Boehlke, 2012) • 10% of individual with a SUD also have an internet addiction (Sussman, Lisha, and Griffiths, ...
... Internet Gaming Disorder and Co-Morbidity • 30% of problem internet users meet criteria for a cooccurring mental health disorder, such as mood disorders, Bipolar 1, and depression (Ashley & Boehlke, 2012) • 10% of individual with a SUD also have an internet addiction (Sussman, Lisha, and Griffiths, ...
Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder(OCD)
... More common among teens and young adults than older people. ...
... More common among teens and young adults than older people. ...
Final Quiz Using DSM-5 for Quality Clinical Assessment, Diagnosis
... 6. The initials of CM in the ICD codes stands for _____a. clinical mode _____b. constant meaning _____c. clinically modified _____d. conditionally monitored 7. The name of the ICD-9-CM and ICD-10-CM clinical guide to help mental health clinicians in diagnosing is known as the: _____a. DSM-5 _____b. ...
... 6. The initials of CM in the ICD codes stands for _____a. clinical mode _____b. constant meaning _____c. clinically modified _____d. conditionally monitored 7. The name of the ICD-9-CM and ICD-10-CM clinical guide to help mental health clinicians in diagnosing is known as the: _____a. DSM-5 _____b. ...
Chapter 16PP part one
... hour at it … At the time I loved it but then didn't want to do it any more, but could not stop … The clothes hung … two fingers apart …I touched my bedroom wall before leaving the house … I had constant anxiety … I thought I might be nuts. Marc, diagnosed with obsessive-compulsive disorder (from Sum ...
... hour at it … At the time I loved it but then didn't want to do it any more, but could not stop … The clothes hung … two fingers apart …I touched my bedroom wall before leaving the house … I had constant anxiety … I thought I might be nuts. Marc, diagnosed with obsessive-compulsive disorder (from Sum ...
abnormal anxiety and mood disorders
... Anxiety Disorders • Through classical conditioning people may associate fear with an object. • Observational learning--watching another experiencing fearfulness--may result in developing fear. • Fear of an object may be reinforced when by avoiding the feared objects. ...
... Anxiety Disorders • Through classical conditioning people may associate fear with an object. • Observational learning--watching another experiencing fearfulness--may result in developing fear. • Fear of an object may be reinforced when by avoiding the feared objects. ...
Abnormal Psychology
... of people who suffer from psychological disorders Behavior and or thoughts From depression, substance abuse, learning difficulties to schizophrenia and bipolar disorder ...
... of people who suffer from psychological disorders Behavior and or thoughts From depression, substance abuse, learning difficulties to schizophrenia and bipolar disorder ...
Kleptomania
Kleptomania is the inability to refrain from the urge to steal items and is done for reasons other than personal use or financial gain. First described in 1816, kleptomania is classified in psychiatry as an impulse control disorder. Alternatively, some of the main characteristics of the disorder, which consist of recurring intrusion feelings, an inability to resist the urge to steal, and a release of pressure following the theft, suggest that kleptomania could be an obsessive-compulsive spectrum disorder, although this is disputed.The disorder is frequently under-diagnosed and is regularly associated with other psychiatric disorders, particularly anxiety and eating disorders, and alcohol and substance abuse. Patients with kleptomania are typically treated with therapies in other areas due to the comorbid grievances rather than issues directly related to kleptomania.Over the last 100 years, a shift from psychotherapeutic to psychopharmacological interventions for kleptomania has occurred. Pharmacological treatments using selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs), mood stabilizers and opioid receptor antagonists, and other antidepressants along with cognitive behavioral therapy, have yielded positive results.